Sex is probably the last thing on your mind when thinking of Tesla.

But Elon Musk‘s firm has shared a very saucy video of its seat-testing robot, with Twitter users joking that the ‘chair is about to have an orgasm’.

New footage of Tesla’s bionic red arm shows a seat being repeatedly pressed down in time with the 2003 hit Satisfaction by Benny Benassi and The Biz. 

As the seat bounces, Tesla explained that it underwent 50,000 ‘ingress/egress cycles’ – the equivalent to a vehicle’s lifetime use.

Even still, just one thing was on the minds of Twitter users, and it wasn’t the standard of Tesla’s quality tests.

A giant bionic arm tested Tesla's  new seats to the beat of the 2003-hit Satisfaction

A giant bionic arm tested Tesla's  new seats to the beat of the 2003-hit Satisfaction

A giant bionic arm tested Tesla’s  new seats to the beat of the 2003-hit Satisfaction

READ MORE: Tesla FINALLY builds its first $70,000 Cybertruck

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body - which Tesla calls the exoskeleton - the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body - which Tesla calls the exoskeleton - the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body – which Tesla calls the exoskeleton – the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup 

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‘That chair is about to have an orgasm,’ one person wrote, while another added: ‘Why is this robot doing something unspeakable to this seat?’

One user joked: ‘When everything reminds you of her?’ while another tweeted: ‘Oh you touched my tralala.’

Musk himself even shared the Tesla post, writing: ‘Turn audio on for max satisfaction.’

The cheeky footage comes just a day after Tesla’s first CyberTruck was built at its ‘Giga Texas’ manufacturing facility in Austin, Texas.

The futuristic all-electric vehicle has a uniquely angular body in gunmetal grey and will be priced at between $50,000 (£38,000) and $70,000 (£53,000).

Some Twitter users believe the seat featured in today’s video may actually be a Cybertruck component, but this has not been confirmed.

‘I must admit … These #Cybertruck seats do look cool,’ one user said, ‘Nice little easter egg.’

Another chimed in: ‘I spy Cybertruck seats #yay,’ as another added: ‘Tesla is just messing with us right now! I see what is going on here! Cybertruck seats!’

Comments flooded Twitter as users made jokes over the saucy new Tesla footage

Comments flooded Twitter as users made jokes over the saucy new Tesla footage

Comments flooded Twitter as users made jokes over the saucy new Tesla footage

Some Twitter users believe the seat featured in today's video may actually be a Cybertruck component, but this has not been confirmed

Some Twitter users believe the seat featured in today's video may actually be a Cybertruck component, but this has not been confirmed

Some Twitter users believe the seat featured in today’s video may actually be a Cybertruck component, but this has not been confirmed 

This cheeky footage comes just a day after Tesla's first CyberTruck was revealed to have been built  inTexas

This cheeky footage comes just a day after Tesla's first CyberTruck was revealed to have been built  inTexas

This cheeky footage comes just a day after Tesla’s first CyberTruck was revealed to have been built  inTexas

Some fans believe the chair being tested may be a component of the new Cybertruck

Some fans believe the chair being tested may be a component of the new Cybertruck

Some fans believe the chair being tested may be a component of the new Cybertruck

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body - which Tesla calls the exoskeleton - the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body - which Tesla calls the exoskeleton - the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup

With its wedge shape and stainless-steel body – which Tesla calls the exoskeleton – the Cybertruck looks nothing like a traditional pickup 

Musk gave fans their first glimpse of the Cybertruck in 2019, but its launch event left the billionaire flustered when the vehicle’s glass windows smashed.

At the time, Tesla design chief Franz von Holshausen tried to prove the glass was ‘shatterproof’ by throwing a heavy metal ball at close range.

But Musk was heard muttering ‘oh my f***ing God’ when the glass smashed – despite appearing to withstand the same test prior to the launch event.

Since then, several design tweaks have been made, and the vehicle is now resistant to the likes of rocks and debris that may fly up when driving through rough terrain. 

Even still, CarBuzz claimed that the Cybertruck received more than 1.5million order since 2019.

MailOnline has approached Tesla for further information.  

Cybertruck timeline: Heavy duty vehicle was first unveiled back in 2019

November 2017: Elon Musk describes a concept of a ‘pickup truck that can carry a pickup truck’. 

November 2019: Musk unveils the Cybertruck prototype. The windows get smashed in a botched demo. 

January 2021: The CEO tweets that Cybertruck ‘doesn’t need a garage’ – because it offers sufficient protection on its own. 

April 2021: Musk says he’s been ‘driving Cybertruck around the site where it will be built’. 

September 2021: Musk said Cybertruck isn’t expected to go into production until late 2022. 

Musk speaks in front of the newly unveiled all-electric battery-powered Tesla's Cybertruck with shattered windows, after a failed resistance test, at Tesla Design Center in Hawthorne, California on November 21, 2019

Musk speaks in front of the newly unveiled all-electric battery-powered Tesla's Cybertruck with shattered windows, after a failed resistance test, at Tesla Design Center in Hawthorne, California on November 21, 2019

Musk speaks in front of the newly unveiled all-electric battery-powered Tesla’s Cybertruck with shattered windows, after a failed resistance test, at Tesla Design Center in Hawthorne, California on November 21, 2019

January 2022: Musk reveals he’s been driving the latest ‘awesome’ prototype around Giga Texas. 

January 2022: Cybertruck production delayed until ‘hopefully next year’, Musk says in an earnings call. 

September 2022: Musk tweets: ‘Cybertruck will be waterproof enough to serve briefly as a boat, so it can cross rivers, lakes & even seas that aren’t too choppy.’

November 2022: Musk tweets: ‘Cybertruck is something special that comes along once in a long while.’  

February 2023: Musk reaffirms that Cybertruck production will start in 2023. 

May 2023: Musk says Tesla is ‘working hard to get Cybertruck into production, calling it a ‘tough product to design and even tougher to build’. 

July 2023: First Cybertruck built at Giga Texas. 

 

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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